Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney yells at an official while coaching against Texas A&M during the 4th quarter at Texas A&M's Kyle Field in College Station, TX Saturday, September 8, 2018. BART BOATWRIGHT/Staff

Clemson defensive back K'Von Wallace (12) sits in the end zone after intercepting Texas A&M's two point conversion late in the 4th quarter at Texas A&M's Kyle Field in College Station, TX Saturday, September 8, 2018. BART BOATWRIGHT/Staff

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney waits to take the field with his team before their game against Texas A&M at Texas A&M's Kyle Field in College Station, TX Saturday, September 8, 2018. BART BOATWRIGHT/Staff

Clemson running back Adam Choice (26) is brought down by the Texas A&M defense during the 2nd quarter at Texas A&M's Kyle Field in College Station, TX Saturday, September 8, 2018. BART BOATWRIGHT/Staff,

Clemson tight end Milan Richard (80) looks to block for running back Adam Choice (26) during the 2nd quarter at Texas A&M's Kyle Field in College Station, TX Saturday, September 8, 2018. BART BOATWRIGHT/Staff,

Clemson running back Travis Etienne (9) reacts after scoring against Texas A&M during the 3rd quarter at Texas A&M's Kyle Field in College Station, TX Saturday, September 8, 2018. BART BOATWRIGHT/Staff,

Clemson running back Travis Etienne (9) reacts after scoring against Texas A&M during the 3rd quarter at Texas A&M's Kyle Field in College Station, TX Saturday, September 8, 2018. BART BOATWRIGHT/Staff,

Saturday night's game between No. 2 Clemson and Texas A&M lived up to the hype, as it took Clemson until the final minute to seal the win.

While the pulse-pounding contest likely kept you glued to the field (or television screen) here are six stats that you may have missed.

109.9

First of all, Kyle Field is as loud as Texas A&M fans claimed it is. At one point, the concrete behemoth's crowd registered a 109.9 dB level, shaking the stadium and the press box even as Clemson controlled most of the game. Remarkably, Clemson was only called for one delay of game penalty, proving their preparation at practice this week paid off.

59

Clemson ran 59 plays against Texas A&M — a far cry from the 74.7 plays per game it averaged in 2017. Dabo Swinney's teams rarely run fewer than 60 plays, and don't usually win when they do; prior to Saturday, the Tigers were 1-4 in their past five games when running fewer than 60 plays, their last win coming against North Texas in 2010.

2

Tee Higgins finished with a game-high 123 receiving yards, marking his second career game with at least 100 receiving yards. Nine Clemson receivers accomplished this feat in 15 games in 2016, but only five have done so in the team's 16 games since. It appears co-offensive coordinators Jeff Scott and Tony Elliott are more dedicated to pushing the ball downfield, so fans should expect Higgins to keep adding to this total.

24

Clemson and Texas A&M put up 24 combined points during an exciting third quarter, which marked the highest-scoring quarter the Tigers have been a part of since they scored 27 unanswered points in the fourth quarter against Boston College on September 23, 2017.

104,794

You can probably guess what this number represents. Fans of both teams showed up in full force Saturday, with 104,794 of them packing into Kyle Field. The figure stands as a top-10 crowd in Kyle Field history and also marks the largest crowd Clemson has ever played in front of. As you could imagine, getting out of the stadium after the game wasn't too fun for those inside.

3

Kelly Bryant played in three more series than Trevor Lawrence, leading Clemson's offense on eight drives to the freshman's three. After talking to both quarterbacks after the game, it appears Clemson wants to give each signal-caller equal opportunity during the team's first several drives of the game before riding the hot hand. In this case, it happened to be Bryant who was callep on to finish the game.

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney yells at an official while coaching against Texas A&M during the 4th quarter at Texas A&M's Kyle Field in College Station, TX Saturday, September 8, 2018. BART BOATWRIGHT/Staff